BEZPLATNÉ UMĚLECKÉ PORADENSTVÍ

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1959 - 2018

Stručné informace

  • Lifespan: 59 years
  • Top-ranked work: Industrial Belt
  • Copyright status: Under copyright
  • Died: 2018
  • Works on APS: 10
  • Více informací…
  • Born: 1959
  • Art period: Contemporary
  • Also known as: Charlotte Lola Rhodes
  • Top 3 works:
    • Industrial Belt
    • Ridge
    • Picnic Area

Kvíz o umění

U každé otázky je pouze jedna správná odpověď.

Otázka 1:
Carol Rhodes is best known for her paintings and drawings depicting:
Otázka 2:
Where was Carol Rhodes born?
Otázka 3:
During which period did Carol Rhodes return to painting after a period of political activism?
Otázka 4:
What is a key characteristic of Carol Rhodes’s aerial landscape paintings?
Otázka 5:
Carol Rhodes studied at which art school?

Carol Rhodes: A Cartographer of the Unseen

Carol Rhodes (1959-2018) emerged from a complex and layered personal history to become a singularly compelling figure in contemporary landscape painting. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, but raised primarily in India until her teenage years, Rhodes’s early life instilled within her a profound sense of displacement and an acute awareness of the shifting boundaries between familiar and foreign landscapes. This initial experience—a juxtaposition of vibrant, densely populated Indian scenes with the stark, often desolate environments of Britain – profoundly shaped her artistic vision, informing a distinctive approach to depicting man-made spaces that would become both intensely personal and strikingly universal. Her journey culminated in a rigorous education at Glasgow School of Art (1977-82), where she honed her technical skills while simultaneously becoming deeply involved in social activism, contributing to movements for disarmament, feminism, and social justice – experiences which subtly but consistently permeated her artistic output.

The Language of the Edgelands

Rhodes’s most recognizable work centers around a series of meticulously rendered paintings and drawings depicting what she termed “edgelands” – those liminal spaces between nature and human construction: abandoned industrial sites, forgotten canals, sprawling motorways, and vast reservoirs. These weren't romanticized pastoral scenes; rather, they were carefully observed representations of the overlooked corners of the British landscape, imbued with a quiet melancholy and an underlying sense of unease. Her aerial perspective—often achieved through photographs or sketches taken from elevated viewpoints – transformed these seemingly mundane locations into complex, layered compositions. This choice of vantage point wasn’t merely aesthetic; it reflected Rhodes's stated interest in seeing the landscape “top to bottom,” emphasizing the interconnectedness of all elements and rejecting a traditional focus on foreground and background. She deliberately avoided depicting the ‘fronts’ of buildings or structures, instead favoring the backsides – the unseen infrastructure that supports our daily lives, revealing the hidden mechanics and processes underlying human activity.

Technique and Influences

Rhodes's technique was characterized by a deliberate restraint and an almost obsessive attention to detail. She often began with preparatory pencil drawings, creating intricate schematics of her chosen locations – a process she described as establishing a “skeleton” for the painting. Her paintings themselves were executed in thin layers of oil paint, utilizing a wet-on-wet technique that created a sense of fluidity and spontaneity despite the underlying precision of her planning. This method resulted in images with an ethereal quality, as if they were caught in a perpetual state of becoming. Her work was subtly influenced by a diverse range of sources: early Renaissance landscape paintings—particularly those depicting atmospheric perspective—provided a framework for her compositions; photographs of Sienese miniatures and Indian miniature paintings informed her color palettes and compositional strategies; and topographical maps offered a grounding in the geometry of the land. Notably, she frequently referenced Giovanni di Paolo’s *Baptist Predella* (1454), citing its depiction of a “pink-clad Saint John the Baptist ascending a grey path into a density of crags” as a key visual reference for her own exploration of liminal spaces and the relationship between human intervention and natural form.

Themes and Legacy

Beyond their purely aesthetic qualities, Rhodes’s paintings engage with profound thematic concerns. Her work explores the complex relationship between humanity and the environment, questioning our role as both creators and destroyers of landscapes. The sense of displacement that characterized her early life—the feeling of being ‘spatially egalitarian,’ seeing all elements of a landscape as equally important – is powerfully conveyed in her paintings’ meticulous detail and their avoidance of hierarchical viewpoints. Furthermore, Rhodes's work subtly critiques the political and economic forces that shape our relationship with the environment, highlighting the often-invisible infrastructure that sustains modern life. Her exploration of “hidden areas” serves as a poignant reminder of the spaces we choose to ignore—and the consequences of doing so. Carol Rhodes’s untimely death in 2018 left behind a remarkably consistent and deeply affecting body of work, solidifying her position as a significant voice in contemporary landscape painting – an artist who revealed the beauty and complexity of the unseen world around us.

Notable Works

* *Service Station* (1998) * *Industrial Belt* (2006) * *Open Tent* (1994) * *Hillside* (2009)